Cloud Computing

Entrusting data to a cloud-based application or cloud services provider is a major step, and manufacturers need to fully educate themselves about the security risks and advantages of cloud-based software.

Continuous changes to the network landscape, including infrastructure, operating systems, and applications can cause organizational security policy and network defense configuration to become misaligned.

Whether you’re moving from an on-premise identity governance solution to the cloud or implementing a cloud-based identity governance solution for the first time, it’s important to take a close look at your organization and its needs before taking the next step.

With multiple vendors and platforms in play, a growing number of devices connecting to the network and the need to manage it all – it’s easy to see why organizations can feel overwhelmed, unsure of the first step to take towards network management and security.

If you’re about to join the cloud revolution, start by answering these questions: how are security responsibilities shared between clients and cloud vendors? And why do on-premises security solutions fail in the cloud?

Establishing a solid plan when deciding to transition to the cloud is essential. By understanding the costs to store, transfer, and retrieve data, organizations can protect themselves from making a costly mistake.

Cloud-based access governance can pull up a portal listing your web-based applications, whether they are hosted in the cloud or running locally within the organization, and can authenticate in the network.

As we continue to see attacks levied against banking and payment applications, the need for fine-grained visibility and control over all aspects of communication between system components will only rise.

Although traditional anti-malware approaches tend to focus on looking deep within each endpoint for suspicious activity, in the case of ransomware particularly, this equates to monitoring the coal miners and when an event happens, you’ve just lost a miner.